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Ancient Mysterious Energy Lines Of Sun Island In Bolivia

Tuesday, December 2, 2014 21:16
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(Before It's News)

In this video, Brien Foerster, The Island of the Sun in Lake Titicaca was the home to the Inca before they entered Cusco. We found that there are strong earth energy currents still working at a main sacred site on this island.

Etymology

The Aymara name for the island is Titi’kaka. The original meaning of this word is not known. Some linguists and archaeologists believe the name to be a corruption of Titi (puma) and Kala (rock). In the 1612 Aymara-Spanish dictionary of Ludovico Bertonio, the phrase Tahksi kala is listed as “piedra fundamental” or “foundation stone” possibly alluding to the origin story of the Inca that the Sun and Moon were born in the lake.

The chronicler Bernabé Cobo documented two versions of an Inca origin myth that took place on the northern part of this island. The first Inca Manco Cápac is said to have emerged from a prominent crag in a large sandstone outcrop known as Titikala (the Sacred Rock). Manco Cápac is the son of Inti the Andean deity identified as the sun. In one version of the myth, the ancient people of the province were without light in the sky for many days and grew frightened of the darkness. Finally, the people saw the Sun emerge from the crag and believed it was the Sun’s dwelling place. In another version related by Cobo, others believed the crag was dedicated to the Sun because it hid under the crag during a great Flood. Isla del Sol was the first land that appeared after the flood waters began to recede and the Sun emerged from Titikala to illuminate the sky once again. A temple was built at this rock and later expanded by the 10th Inca Tupac Inca Yupanqui. He built a convent for mamaconas (chosen women) and a tambo (inn) for visiting pilgrims.

Archaeology

Excavations at the archaeological site of Ch’uxuqullu, located on a small peak above the Bay of Challa, led to the recovery of Archaic Preceramic remains that radiocarbon dated to about 2200 BC. Eight obsidian flakes were recovered from this context, and Neutron Activation Analysis of three of the flakes revealed that all of them were from the Chivay obsidian source which is located in the Colca Canyon, Department of Arequipa. The presence of Chivay obsidian is clear evidence that inhabitants of the island were participating in a wider network of exchange.

According to one bathymetric model, there is no path between the shore edge and the Island of the Sun that does not pass over areas where the lake bottom reaches a depth of 200 m (660 ft) or greater. Paleoclimate studies indicate that around 3100 BC the level of Lake Titicaca would have been as much as 85 m (279 ft) lower than modern conditions, but that it had reached near modern levels by about 2000 BC. Thus, at 2200 BC lake levels were probably lower than at present but still high enough that the island was separated by water from the mainland. Data from Ch’uxuqullu therefore indicates that the lake shore cultures were using well-developed watercraft technology during the Archaic period.

The island was continually occupied from at least 2200 BCE up to the present day. There is a significant Early Formative occupation (1800-1100 BCE), Middle Formative (1100-500 BCE)and Upper Formative (500 BCE – AD 500). Most significantly, there is a major Tiwanaku (Tiahuanaco) settlement on the island. The site of Chucaripupata was a major Tiwanaku ritual site located above the famous Titikala or Sacred Rock of the Incas. Chucaripupata was located on the western side of the island a few hundred meters from the Titikala, immediately below the higher rock outcrop known as the Murokata. It is therefore possible that the Murokata was the “sacred rock” of the Tiwanaku culture.

The archaeological evidence indicates that neither the Murokata nor the Titikala were used during the Late Intermediate Period (ca AD 1000-1450). With the conquest of the southern Titicaca region by the Inca, the Titikala zone was converted into one of the most important pilgrimage destinations in the Inca state on par with the famous oracle at Pachacamac on the coast just south of Lima.

Underwater archaeological investigations conducted off the Island of the Sun from 1989-92 led to the discovery of both Inca and Tiahuanaco artifacts. These are now on display at a site museum in Challapampa. Today the economy of the island is mainly driven by tourism revenues, but subsistence agriculture and fishing are widely practiced.

SOURCE: WIKIPEDIA & Brien Foerster

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